Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the intersection of fermentation, sound, and time through sound-aged shochu in Amami Oshima—a unique practice where vibration and environment subtly influence the maturation process. Rooted in traditional techniques of shochu production, this approach introduces an experimental dimension: the use of sound as a shaping force within fermentation and aging. We trace the historical context of Amami’s brown sugar shochu culture, where climate, microbial activity, and craftsmanship define flavor. The introduction of sound—music, low-frequency vibration, or controlled resonance—suggests a new layer of interaction between liquid, container, and environment, echoing broader ideas of acoustic influence on physical systems. Technologically and conceptually, this practice sits between tradition and experimentation. While scientific consensus on sonic impact remains evolving, the aesthetic and philosophical implications are clear: time, vibration, and perception become intertwined. Sound is no longer only something we hear, but something that potentially shapes material transformation. This episode analyzes fermentation as a temporal composition—where microorganisms, environment, and now sound create a slow, evolving process. Through history, craft, and speculative acoustics, we explore how sound-aged shochu expands the boundaries between culture, science, and sensory experience. 【Related Column】Shochu grown by sound: The harmony of fermentation that resonates in Amami Oshima https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-shochu-sound-aging/
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